Greetings in that Divine and Most Precious Name of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!

I just finished working on a Lesson about the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, and I am very interesting in contributing to this thread. However, not at the moment, so I am posting this to find it later stay blessed,habte selassie

Why do all the icons from the OO's i see seem to be, childlike in nature. As in, they seem to be painted so the figures in them appear to all be children?

EDIT: just like this one, taken from Habte's post in the WR discussion

Thanks folks

Seems to be an Eastern thing. Hindu Icons look very much the same. While the style is distinctive, I have never thought of it as childlike (I am assuming that you mean the people look childlike and not that the paintings themselves look like they were done by children). I think they do portray an innocence that is not present in the Greek style Icons.

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I would be happy to agree with you, but then both of us would be wrong.

Normally I wouldn't link to Wikipedia on such an issue, but it is important to recognize that they are not childlike in the sense that the Egyptians, Syrians, and others had no ability to paint more realistically. Check out the Fayoum portrait from the second century AD (first pic in the linked "Coptic Art" article). So the OO artwork is stylized that way, and for much the same reasons that EO icons look the way that they do -- to express spiritual truth, rather than fleshy material reality.

Normally I wouldn't link to Wikipedia on such an issue, but it is important to recognize that they are not childlike in the sense that the Egyptians, Syrians, and others had no ability to paint more realistically. Check out the Fayoum portrait from the second century AD (first pic in the linked "Coptic Art" article). So the OO artwork is stylized that way, and for much the same reasons that EO icons look the way that they do -- to express spiritual truth, rather than fleshy material reality.

This is what I assumed he meant when I saw the thread title... though apparently it wasn't...

Honestly, any Ethiopian icon I've ever seen looks like a water color. I mean no offense by this; it's just an observation.

That is the style that has been preferred for a thousand years. It has increased in stylistic detail, but the overall style has remained the same. Of course, the paints are constructed in the same rigorously religious methodology as are Byzantine Icons. In regards to the childlike faces, the EO icons and even Latin religious art preserve a degree of this idea, but have a bit of stylistic variation. The expressions on the faces of icons are meant to convey the spiritual feeling of revelation. They are engulfed in the Holy Spirit at that moment, as hopefully we will also become as we gaze into these windows to heaven. Their look is one which denies the passions of the body and mind, but which embraces the Grace of God in the sincere childlike innocence which Christ asks of us when He told us to enter into the Kingdom of God as little children. For a Latin comparison of this premise, albeit in entirely different degrees, check out the Ecstasy of Saint Theresa.

Her face here captures a moment of Divine revelation. The "childlike" look of the icons in the Ethiopian tradition convey this same meaning, that is, the overwhelming power of the Grace of God. Further, remember that human beings are instinctively programmed to love and nurture children, even if they are animals. So when the Saints are portrayed in childlike features or innocence, we are instinctively obliged to respect and pay attention to them, just as we tend to do by second-nature in our interactions with actual children. The Fathers are acting on our neurochemistry as much as our spirituality

Sometimes the Ethiopian icons in particular have such an expression of spiritual aloofness that I almost swear it is a look of sway or swagger out of the self-assurance of Faith.

stay blessed,habte selassie

« Last Edit: June 12, 2012, 04:19:32 PM by HabteSelassie »

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"Yet stand aloof from stupid questionings and geneologies and strifes and fightings about law, for they are without benefit and vain." Titus 3:10

Ah, neo-Coptic art! I love it when I see it overtaking the Western wanna be iconography of the Coptic Church's Western captivity (though I have to admit to Latins and people like Mardukm that neo-Coptic iconography does have a Greek/"Byzantine" tinge to it that is not present in the older icons).

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Question a friend, perhaps he did not do it; but if he did anything so that he may do it no more.A hasty quarrel kindles fire,and urgent strife sheds blood.If you blow on a spark, it will glow;if you spit on it, it will be put out; and both come out of your mouth

This statue, however... I would feel very uncomfortable venerating such an image. For obvious reasons.

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Quote from: Fr. Thomas Hopko, dystopian parable of the prodigal son

...you can imagine so-called healing services of the pigpen. The books that could be written, you know: Life in the Pigpen. How to Cope in the Pigpen. Being Happy in the Pigpen. Surviving in the Pigpen. And then there could be counselling, for people who feel unhappy in the pigpen, to try to get them to come to terms with the pigpen, and to accept the pigpen.

I've always admired how comfortably interchangeable Ethiopians are about the ethnicity of Jesus. It seems that Ethiopian Christians, including churches and monasteries themselves, easily accept and embrace the veneration of all three ethnic conceptions of Jesus, and therein you will find European images of Jesus with blue eyes, Middle Eastern images of Jesus with brown skin and Semitic features, and black images of Jesus with darker skin and a small Ethiopian style Afro

While this variation has upset the sensibilities of some outside observers, I've always interpreted it as evidence of the overwhelmingly pious acceptance of Jesus and any representation there of.

stay blessed,habte selassie

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"Yet stand aloof from stupid questionings and geneologies and strifes and fightings about law, for they are without benefit and vain." Titus 3:10

there is no confusion as to what ethnicity Our Lord and his Mother are from, he is a Jew so is his mother. the Afro you see is only depicted while he was a boy, as he grows up , because he is a Nazarene his hair is long. there is no such nonesense as the black Jesus huha in Ethiopia, we revere the son of David and his Jewish ancestry as well as his global cosmic ancestry as being the Incarnate Logos who has become our kin. there is no suprise to see a Caucasian Jesus, or a Mongolian featured Jesus, or a black Jesus if one looks at the theology behind it as being that Christ is all and in All. however I can not stand to hear the stuff that circulates among certain groups today that wants to give him a different history than what was his, to give him a different ethnicity than was his historically. that type of argument steams from a sick mentality that is already corrupt by racism.

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To God be the Glory in all things! Amen!

Only pray for me, that God would give me both inward and outward strength, that I may not only speak, but truly will; and that I may not merely be called a Christian, but really be found to be one. St.Ignatius of Antioch.Epistle to the Romans.

there is no confusion as to what ethnicity Our Lord and his Mother are from, he is a Jew so is his mother. the Afro you see is only depicted while he was a boy, as he grows up , because he is a Nazarene his hair is long. there is no such nonesense as the black Jesus huha in Ethiopia, we revere the son of David and his Jewish ancestry as well as his global cosmic ancestry as being the Incarnate Logos who has become our kin. there is no suprise to see a Caucasian Jesus, or a Mongolian featured Jesus, or a black Jesus if one looks at the theology behind it as being that Christ is all and in All. however I can not stand to hear the stuff that circulates among certain groups today that wants to give him a different history than what was his, to give him a different ethnicity than was his historically. that type of argument steams from a sick mentality that is already corrupt by racism.

Of course not, and of course Ethiopians assert Jesus was more like an Arab than an African, however, surely you've noticed how Ethiopian Churches and Ethiopians in their private devotion are perfectly comfortable with venerating images of Jesus in all three shades, white, black, and brown. I've known and seen Ethiopians who personally own and venerate these more Anglo images of Jesus as comfortably as any Ethiopian icon. I saw a wonderful anecdotal video of some Rastas visiting a monastery in Lake Tana where they came across some noticeably white images of Jesus Christ in the church. They were some printed postcard kinds of Jesus, and they were prominently tacked up near the Iconostasis of all places! This offended the visitors who asked the priests about that. The priests replied that these were devotional gifts left behind by visitors. When pressed as to why they were tacked up so prominently, the priest essentially said, "Its Jesus, duh." That being said, from my experience, many other Christians get ridiculously caught up in what race images of Jesus should be, because of as you've said, "some folks are way to caught up in the sick mentality that is already corrupt by racism" (both overt and reverse).

I've never seen other churches which are so comfortable with different ethnic images of Jesus. Many churches get very offended at different portrayals. Some Catholics get offended at an icon without blue eyes, some Orientals get offended at the blue eyed versions, I've witnessed this ugliness personally. To me, its all good, Jesus is Jesus y'all

stay blessed,habte selassie

« Last Edit: June 13, 2012, 09:00:45 PM by HabteSelassie »

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"Yet stand aloof from stupid questionings and geneologies and strifes and fightings about law, for they are without benefit and vain." Titus 3:10

there is no confusion as to what ethnicity Our Lord and his Mother are from, he is a Jew so is his mother. the Afro you see is only depicted while he was a boy, as he grows up , because he is a Nazarene his hair is long. there is no such nonesense as the black Jesus huha in Ethiopia, we revere the son of David and his Jewish ancestry as well as his global cosmic ancestry as being the Incarnate Logos who has become our kin. there is no suprise to see a Caucasian Jesus, or a Mongolian featured Jesus, or a black Jesus if one looks at the theology behind it as being that Christ is all and in All. however I can not stand to hear the stuff that circulates among certain groups today that wants to give him a different history than what was his, to give him a different ethnicity than was his historically. that type of argument steams from a sick mentality that is already corrupt by racism.

Of course not, and of course Ethiopians assert Jesus was more like an Arab than an African, however, surely you've noticed how Ethiopian Churches and Ethiopians in their private devotion are perfectly comfortable with venerating images of Jesus in all three shades, white, black, and brown. I've known and seen Ethiopians who personally own and venerate these more Anglo images of Jesus as comfortably as any Ethiopian icon. I saw a wonderful anecdotal video of some Rastas visiting a monastery in Lake Tana where they came across some noticeably white images of Jesus Christ in the church. They were some printed postcard kinds of Jesus, and they were prominently tacked up near the Iconostasis of all places! This offended the visitors who asked the priests about that. The priests replied that these were devotional gifts left behind by visitors. When pressed as to why they were tacked up so prominently, the priest essentially said, "Its Jesus, duh." That being said, from my experience, many other Christians get ridiculously caught up in what race images of Jesus should be, because of as you've said, "some folks are way to caught up in the sick mentality that is already corrupt by racism" (both overt and reverse).

I've never seen other churches which are so comfortable with different ethnic images of Jesus. Many churches get very offended at different portrayals. Some Catholics get offended at an icon without blue eyes, some Orientals get offended at the blue eyed versions, I've witnessed this ugliness personally. To me, its all good, Jesus is Jesus y'all

stay blessed,habte selassie

Just for balance: the "Byzantine" objections to depictions of the Lord with non-standard features is grounded in the strictures of canonical iconography and not any race consciousness.

The Greeks have long been enamoured of light eyes, skin and hair, yet we insist on depicting the Lord with none of these.

there is no confusion as to what ethnicity Our Lord and his Mother are from, he is a Jew so is his mother. the Afro you see is only depicted while he was a boy, as he grows up , because he is a Nazarene his hair is long. there is no such nonesense as the black Jesus huha in Ethiopia, we revere the son of David and his Jewish ancestry as well as his global cosmic ancestry as being the Incarnate Logos who has become our kin. there is no suprise to see a Caucasian Jesus, or a Mongolian featured Jesus, or a black Jesus if one looks at the theology behind it as being that Christ is all and in All. however I can not stand to hear the stuff that circulates among certain groups today that wants to give him a different history than what was his, to give him a different ethnicity than was his historically. that type of argument steams from a sick mentality that is already corrupt by racism.

Of course not, and of course Ethiopians assert Jesus was more like an Arab than an African, however, surely you've noticed how Ethiopian Churches and Ethiopians in their private devotion are perfectly comfortable with venerating images of Jesus in all three shades, white, black, and brown. I've known and seen Ethiopians who personally own and venerate these more Anglo images of Jesus as comfortably as any Ethiopian icon. I saw a wonderful anecdotal video of some Rastas visiting a monastery in Lake Tana where they came across some noticeably white images of Jesus Christ in the church. They were some printed postcard kinds of Jesus, and they were prominently tacked up near the Iconostasis of all places! This offended the visitors who asked the priests about that. The priests replied that these were devotional gifts left behind by visitors. When pressed as to why they were tacked up so prominently, the priest essentially said, "Its Jesus, duh." That being said, from my experience, many other Christians get ridiculously caught up in what race images of Jesus should be, because of as you've said, "some folks are way to caught up in the sick mentality that is already corrupt by racism" (both overt and reverse).

I've never seen other churches which are so comfortable with different ethnic images of Jesus. Many churches get very offended at different portrayals. Some Catholics get offended at an icon without blue eyes, some Orientals get offended at the blue eyed versions, I've witnessed this ugliness personally. To me, its all good, Jesus is Jesus y'all

stay blessed,habte selassie

Just for balance: the "Byzantine" objections to depictions of the Lord with non-standard features is grounded in the strictures of canonical iconography and not any race consciousness.

The Greeks have long been enamoured of light eyes, skin and hair, yet we insist on depicting the Lord with none of these.

as it should be! I am also of the conviction that we must stick to the simple historical truth in this matter.

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To God be the Glory in all things! Amen!

Only pray for me, that God would give me both inward and outward strength, that I may not only speak, but truly will; and that I may not merely be called a Christian, but really be found to be one. St.Ignatius of Antioch.Epistle to the Romans.

Every time I've seen this image referenced by Orthodox commentators it is used to epitomize the difference between Orthodox spirituality and that of heretics. The West lost the sense of dispassion and distrust of swaying emotions in divine revelation. This clearly expresses the kind of sentimentality which came to dominate Western Christendom in its art and hagiography, and then later with pietism.

The most ancient styles of iconography are also found within Eastern Orthodox churches. Especially in the Georgian and Bulgarian icons.

Georgian icon of Christ Pantokrator:

Georgian icon of the Theotokos:

Bulgarian icon of the Theotokos (one of my favorites):

How amazing! I've just asked "Zenovia" on the other thread why there are no Georgians in such Christian forums. Believe me, I haven't seen this thread earlier. The Icons are beautiful, and the letters on them look like Ethiopic writing system.

I dont like that modern Western style at all I am afraid. It is not really Coptic or Orthodox.

Yes, it really is awful. Some Copts have started using this western art in the iconostasis, even the monastery I visited here in the U.S. I do not at all wish to bring reproach upon said monastery as I have experienced a peace there which I had never experienced before in my life. But, it disturbs me that even those men of our Church who are closest to the Lord have, to some degree, subscribed to "western captivity".

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"I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die [...] These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." -The Lord Jesus Christ

No longer active on OC.net. Please pray for me and forgive any harm I might have caused by my ignorance and malice.

I dont like that modern Western style at all I am afraid. It is not really Coptic or Orthodox.

Yes, it really is awful. Some Copts have started using this western art in the iconostasis, even the monastery I visited here in the U.S. I do not at all wish to bring reproach upon said monastery as I have experienced a peace there which I had never experienced before in my life. But, it disturbs me that even those men of our Church who are closest to the Lord have, to some degree, subscribed to "western captivity".

Step away from the English.Mass transit.Water and waste management.The internet.Most of your world.

How amazing! I've just asked "Zenovia" on the other thread why there are no Georgians in such Christian forums. Believe me, I haven't seen this thread earlier. The Icons are beautiful, and the letters on them look like Ethiopic writing system.

I understand that the Georgian syllabic alphabet and the Ethiopian Fidel borrow from a mutual root language

Funny story. At my parish one day, a Georgian man stumbles in at 6am which is Morning Prayer before Liturgy. It is just me, two priests, and a hand full of elderly ladies wrapped up in their netela. One of our priests is white, with a big beard, he could pass for a Russian priest in a heartbeat. So my priest comes by, brings me some readings and goes up to pray. The Georgian man stands in the pew in front of me, bows at the right times, seems to be following along. Then the priests turn and face the congregation for the blessing, and the Georgian man realizes all the priests but one are not Russians, they are black men. So he looks around in a wild and puzzled look at the people who are there. He realizes all the folks are black folks, panics, and literally runs out grabbing a prayer book on the way. He stops in the door way and tries to read the book, realizes where he is at, and runs off. Turns out all along he thought he was in a Georgian Church!!

stay blessed,habte selassie

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"Yet stand aloof from stupid questionings and geneologies and strifes and fightings about law, for they are without benefit and vain." Titus 3:10

I dont like that modern Western style at all I am afraid. It is not really Coptic or Orthodox.

Yes, it really is awful. Some Copts have started using this western art in the iconostasis, even the monastery I visited here in the U.S. I do not at all wish to bring reproach upon said monastery as I have experienced a peace there which I had never experienced before in my life. But, it disturbs me that even those men of our Church who are closest to the Lord have, to some degree, subscribed to "western captivity".

Step away from the English.Mass transit.Water and waste management.The internet.Most of your world.

Free yourself from the captivity.

Yes! You! Can!

What are you talking about? I was referring to the westernization of the Coptic Church. I was not condemning all of western culture. I thought that would be clear from the context of this thread and other threads on this website which have discussed this topic before. Unless, you are trying to joke around, in which case, you will have to forgive me as I am very bad at understanding jokes.

« Last Edit: June 14, 2012, 07:56:13 PM by Severian »

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"I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die [...] These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." -The Lord Jesus Christ

No longer active on OC.net. Please pray for me and forgive any harm I might have caused by my ignorance and malice.

Hahaha. That's a great story, Habte. There are certain similarities in individual symbol/letter forms of the Armenian and Ethiopian script that have prompted some people to say the same about them, too (that they're somehow related). It's not really true, though. For one thing, the Georgian and Armenian are both proper alphabets, not syllabaries (or, more properly, abugidas). More importantly, genetically they are unrelated. The Ethio-Semitic languages are, well...Semitic, while Georgian is Caucasian and Armenian is its own branch of Indo-European. (However, the Georgian and Armenian alphabets have long been considered to be directly related to one another, being the invention of St. Mesrop according to the Armenians and others...though of course the Georgians dispute this.)

Cantor Krishnich: The Georgian icons you've posted remind me more than a little bit of indigenous Mexican (and New Mexican) art. Very cool to see. Thanks for sharing.

In fact, there's probably more in common with art forms in Mesoamerica and those of the Christian Orient than one might first imagine...

Hahaha. That's a great story, Habte. There are certain similarities in individual symbol/letter forms of the Armenian and Ethiopian script that have prompted some people to say the same about them, too (that they're somehow related). It's not really true, though. For one thing, the Georgian and Armenian are both proper alphabets, not syllabaries (or, more properly, abugidas). More importantly, genetically they are unrelated. The Ethio-Semitic languages are, well...Semitic, while Georgian is Caucasian and Armenian is its own branch of Indo-European. (However, the Georgian and Armenian alphabets have long been considered to be directly related to one another, being the invention of St. Mesrop according to the Armenians and others...though of course the Georgians dispute this.)

Cantor Krishnich: The Georgian icons you've posted remind me more than a little bit of indigenous Mexican (and New Mexican) art. Very cool to see. Thanks for sharing.

In fact, there's probably more in common with art forms in Mesoamerica and those of the Christian Orient than one might first imagine...

The Fidel is not a true syllabary, it is a syllabic alphabet. The Old Georgian (Asomtavruli) is strikingly similar in style to the Ethiopic Fidel, in fact, it is realistically more like a syllabic alphabet than a true alphabet. I had read about these connections in an obscure but recent Afro-Asiatic linguistic journal article. The author was connecting the similarities in the past (around the 400-900s) when the first Georgian alphabet was evolving. This author, and several others he quoted and which I have also read elsewhere, suggested that both the Georgian and the Ethiopic stem from a common root ancestor script which originated in the Arabian peninsula (because the Yemeni scripts are also very similar). Another article I recall asserted that Georgian is not related to Armenian. In regards to Afro-Asiatic languages, things are changing all the time, the historiography is in flux. People used to say Semitic languages originated in Arabia, and were imported into Africa. Now, it is common to say that Semitic spoken languages evolved in East Africa, migrated into Arabia where they found an alphabet and then came back into Ethiopia as a written script. Some other authors have suggested that the scripts adopted by Semitic speakers actually first originated in the Caucuses regions.

I definitely agree with the Latin American similarities to the Oriental art, having been a born and raised Angelino I have a cultural affinity for such, and I feel it has always helped in making me more comfortable in Ethiopian and Coptic churches and communities. They are very similar, both culturally and artistically. I feel at home in both

stay blessed,habte selassie

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"Yet stand aloof from stupid questionings and geneologies and strifes and fightings about law, for they are without benefit and vain." Titus 3:10

Every time I've seen this image referenced by Orthodox commentators it is used to epitomize the difference between Orthodox spirituality and that of heretics. The West lost the sense of dispassion and distrust of swaying emotions in divine revelation. This clearly expresses the kind of sentimentality which came to dominate Western Christendom in its art and hagiography, and then later with pietism.

The Old Georgian (Asomtavruli) is strikingly similar in style to the Ethiopic Fidel

What do you mean by "similar in style"?

Quote

in fact, it is realistically more like a syllabic alphabet than a true alphabet.

How so? Individual characters do not represent syllables. This would be a particularly bad way of representing Georgian, as words can contain up to six-element consonant clusters, even word-initially (Ritter 2006). So I'd like to know what you mean by this.

Quote

I had read about these connections in an obscure but recent Afro-Asiatic linguistic journal article.

Do you have a citation for this article? I'd like to look it up and read it myself, if possible.

Quote

The author was connecting the similarities in the past (around the 400-900s) when the first Georgian alphabet was evolving. This author, and several others he quoted and which I have also read elsewhere, suggested that both the Georgian and the Ethiopic stem from a common root ancestor script which originated in the Arabian peninsula (because the Yemeni scripts are also very similar).

I have never read anything that suggests that the Georgian developed from the same in any meaningful or direct way, as others have proposed regarding Georgian's relation to Armenian.

Quote

Another article I recall asserted that Georgian is not related to Armenian. In regards to Afro-Asiatic languages, things are changing all the time, the historiography is in flux. People used to say Semitic languages originated in Arabia, and were imported into Africa. Now, it is common to say that Semitic spoken languages evolved in East Africa, migrated into Arabia where they found an alphabet and then came back into Ethiopia as a written script. Some other authors have suggested that the scripts adopted by Semitic speakers actually first originated in the Caucuses regions.

Citations, links, anything...? It is uncontroversial to assert that, as concerns the Ethiopian Semites at least, Semitic speakers moved into East Africa sometime BC (I've heard everything from first to fourth century), mixing with preexisting Cushites. This is supported linguistically by exploring the rather obvious Cushitic substratum in the Ethio-Semitic languages, as you will find discussed in even basic texts on Historical Linguistics (in Trask's introductory text, for instance). It is, I suppose, a thing that people say, but not nearly just something people used to say, as it has not been discredited.

Quote

I definitely agree with the Latin American similarities to the Oriental art, having been a born and raised Angelino I have a cultural affinity for such, and I feel it has always helped in making me more comfortable in Ethiopian and Coptic churches and communities. They are very similar, both culturally and artistically. I feel at home in both

Yup. I can relate to that, despite not being an Angelino in the slightest.

about these connections in an obscure but recent Afro-Asiatic linguistic journal article.

Do you have a citation for this article? I'd like to look it up and read it myself, if possible.

Citations, links, anything...? It is uncontroversial to assert that, as concerns the Ethiopian Semites at least, Semitic speakers moved into East Africa sometime BC (I've heard everything from first to fourth century), mixing with preexisting Cushites. This is supported linguistically by exploring the rather obvious Cushitic substratum in the Ethio-Semitic languages, as you will find discussed in even basic texts on Historical Linguistics (in Trask's introductory text, for instance).

I would love to cite but my JSTOR acount is expired

I have already gotten in hot water over these unbacked claims in recent times. However, this is just an internet forum, not a published journal. If something I suggest as if in conversation provokes interest in you, you got to follow through and check it out for yourself. I am not trying to prove this, just discuss at a casual level. Those are not arguments I am trying to make in any kind of authoritative way, I am just talking about what I've read in the past.

In regards to Afro-Asiatic origins in the Horn rather then Arabia.. The "standard" model suggests Arabian origin, but I have read recent authors assert different, that indigenous Semitic linguistic diversity across the Horn suggests perhaps a Semitic origin point in Africa rather than Arabia. There still very well may have been some Arabian infusion into the Horn, but Semitic culture may also predate this in Africa. As I said, some models suggest that Semitic language originates in Africa, crosses into Arabia, and then finds and alphabet which returns with the Arabian infusion into the Horn around 1500BC-1000BC. We know folks from Yemen and the Arabian peninsula came in, that is a fact, the new questions is were there already preexisting Semitic Africans there in the Horn. A lot of evidence is starting to suggest yes. Again, this is a casual conversation, I'm not trying to prove this to you. However, if it interests you, look it up, prove me wrong

stay blessed,habte selassie

« Last Edit: June 15, 2012, 12:31:33 AM by HabteSelassie »

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"Yet stand aloof from stupid questionings and geneologies and strifes and fightings about law, for they are without benefit and vain." Titus 3:10

Do you remember anything about the journal name, author name, article title, etc.? Maybe I can find it via Proquest.

Quote

I have already gotten in hot water over these unbacked claims in recent times. However, this is just an internet forum, not a published journal.

I know. I'm just asking because I'm curious. I'm doing my dissertation work on an Afroasiatic language, so it behooves me to be up on what kind of research is going on out there in this field (which I thought I was, but you can only read so many journals, I guess).

The short answer is that no, such depictions are not icons. Well-executed and beautiful religious art, yes. Icons suitable for veneration, no.

It seems narrow-minded to demand Orientals observe the byzantine style of iconography and to reject Chinese style icons. How many Orthodox Churches are there in China today?

Stanley, please read the thread I linked to. There is the crucial matter of the icon being faithful to the prototype. Neither Christ, nor His mother were Chinese. As for making icons more palatable to Chinese or other Asians, is it acceptable to Buddhists to have statues of Buddha with western features, so as to make it easier for western converts to Buddhism to relate to him? I seriously doubt if western converts to Buddhism are hindered in their acceptance of that faith because the imagery was not western.

The short answer is that no, such depictions are not icons. Well-executed and beautiful religious art, yes. Icons suitable for veneration, no.

It seems narrow-minded to demand Orientals observe the byzantine style of iconography and to reject Chinese style icons. How many Orthodox Churches are there in China today?

Stanley, please read the thread I linked to. There is the crucial matter of the icon being faithful to the prototype. Neither Christ, nor His mother were Chinese. As for making icons more palatable to Chinese or other Asians, is it acceptable to Buddhists to have statues of Buddha with western features, so as to make it easier for western converts to Buddhism to relate to him? I seriously doubt if western converts to Buddhism are hindered in their acceptance of that faith because the imagery was not western.

It seems like you are engaging in a form of selective cultural iconoclasm by rejecting Chinese art form and style for icons and demanding that Chinese adopt the Greek style of art to portray Christ and the Mother of God. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvaltRzYMTI

It seems like you are engaging in a form of selective cultural iconoclasm by rejecting Chinese art form and style for icons and demanding that Chinese adopt the Greek style of art to portray Christ and the Mother of God.

The short answer is that no, such depictions are not icons. Well-executed and beautiful religious art, yes. Icons suitable for veneration, no.

It seems narrow-minded to demand Orientals observe the byzantine style of iconography and to reject Chinese style icons. How many Orthodox Churches are there in China today?

Stanley, please read the thread I linked to. There is the crucial matter of the icon being faithful to the prototype. Neither Christ, nor His mother were Chinese. As for making icons more palatable to Chinese or other Asians, is it acceptable to Buddhists to have statues of Buddha with western features, so as to make it easier for western converts to Buddhism to relate to him? I seriously doubt if western converts to Buddhism are hindered in their acceptance of that faith because the imagery was not western.

It seems like you are engaging in a form of selective cultural iconoclasm by rejecting Chinese art form and style for icons and demanding that Chinese adopt the Greek style of art to portray Christ and the Mother of God. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvaltRzYMTI

You are confusing style with content. No one is rejecting the Chinese art style--we are rejecting the portrayal of Christ (and the Theotokos) as Chinese, whether the art-style used is Chinese, Byzantine, Coptic, Baroque or hyper-realism.

The whole basis of the theology of icons is that God became man. And He did so not in some kind of abstract or conceptual but rather as an actual, individual human being (who happened to be a Palestinian Jew in the first century). Since He became an individual, you can draw a picture of that individual and that picture is a picture of God. But if you move away from even attempting to portray that actual individual and instead portray Christ/God according to your personal preferences without regard to the actual historical fact of the Incarnation, then you are moving away from iconography and into the area of idols--where we portray God as *we* would like to see him, not as He as actually was/is.

For it were better to suffer everything, rather than divide the Church of God. Even martyrdom for the sake of preventing division would not be less glorious than for refusing to worship idols. - St. Dionysius the Great

It seems like you are engaging in a form of selective cultural iconoclasm by rejecting Chinese art form and style for icons and demanding that Chinese adopt the Greek style of art to portray Christ and the Mother of God.

Our Divine Lord came for all men, not just the Jews. The Greek style icon is beautiful and inspiring, of course, and it has brought millions of souls to reflection on the mysteries and truths of Christianity, but it seems a bit harsh on the Chinese to deny them an artistic license in their depiction of the Holy Family.

This Icon is used at a Coptic website; it is also present at a Greek church (jeweled in white) and I own two! As long as there is similarity to the original painting (old Icons) and if I can connect to the Icon/s, I have no problem using it to venerate…. I do not care if the Icon is from EO or Catholic church!